5,418 research outputs found
Perturbative Analysis of Universality and Individuality in Gravitational Waves from Neutron Stars
The universality observed in gravitational wave spectra of non-rotating
neutron stars is analyzed here. We show that the universality in the axial
oscillation mode can be reproduced with a simple stellar model, namely the
centrifugal barrier approximation (CBA), which captures the essence of the
Tolman VII model of compact stars. Through the establishment of scaled
co-ordinate logarithmic perturbation theory (SCLPT), we are able to explain and
quantitatively predict such universal behavior. In addition, quasi-normal modes
of individual neutron stars characterized by different equations of state can
be obtained from those of CBA with SCLPT.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Astrophysical Journa
Physical Processes in Naked Singularity Formation
Gravitational collapse is one of the most fruitful subjects in gravitational
physics. It is well known that singularity formation is inevitable in complete
gravitational collapse. It was conjectured that such a singularity should be
hidden by horizons if it is formed from generic initial data with physically
reasonable matter fields. Many possible counterexamples to this conjecture have
been proposed over the past three decades, although none of them has proved to
be sufficiently generic. In these examples, there appears a singularity that is
not hidden by horizons. This singularity is called a `naked singularity.' The
appearance of a naked singularity represents the formation of an observable
high-curvature, strong-gravity region. In this paper we review examples of
naked singularity formation and recent progress in research of observable
physical processes - gravitational radiation and quantum particle creation -
from a forming naked singularity.Comment: 76 pages, 25 figure file
On the r-mode spectrum of relativistic stars in the low-frequency approximation
The axial modes for non-barotropic relativistic rotating neutron stars with
uniform angular velocity are studied, using the slow-rotation formalism
together with the low-frequency approximation, first investigated by Kojima.
The time independent form of the equations leads to a singular eigenvalue
problem, which admits a continuous spectrum. We show that for , it is
nevertheless also possible to find discrete mode solutions (the -modes).
However, under certain conditions related to the equation of state and the
compactness of the stellar model, the eigenfrequency lies inside the continuous
band and the associated velocity perturbation is divergent; hence these
solutions have to be discarded as being unphysical. We corroborate our results
by explicitly integrating the time dependent equations. For stellar models
admitting a physical -mode solution, it can indeed be excited by arbitrary
initial data. For models admitting only an unphysical mode solution, the
evolutions do not show any tendency to oscillate with the respective frequency.
For higher values of , it seems that in certain cases there are no mode
solutions at all.Comment: Major revision, corrected results concerning realistic equations of
state, now 17 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS typesettin
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